United States activates Disaster Assistance Response Team to respond to humanitarian needs in the South Caucasus

 19:34,

YEREVAN, SEPTEMBER 28, ARMENPRESS. The U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) has deployed a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) in the South Caucasus region to coordinate the U.S. humanitarian response, USAID Administrator Samantha Power said in a statement after traveling to Armenia.

“This week, I traveled to Armenia to hear directly from the people fleeing their homes in Nagorno-Karabakh in the wake of Azerbaijan’s September 19-20 attacks. The United States is deeply concerned about the safety of vulnerable populations in Nagorno-Karabakh and the more than 50,000 people who have fled to Armenia. We are grateful to the Government of Armenia for welcoming new arrivals and helping them find shelter and to humanitarian organizations working to address acute needs. 

“Today, I am announcing that the U.S. Agency for International Development has deployed a Disaster Assistance Response Team (DART) in the South Caucasus region to coordinate the U.S. humanitarian response. The DART will assess the situation, identify priority needs to scale up assistance, and work with partners to provide urgently needed aid.

“Last week’s unacceptable military operation has made an already dire humanitarian situation even worse. For nine months, Azerbaijan blocked the Lachin Corridor – shutting down a vital lifeline that connects the residents of Nagorno-Karabakh with food, medicine, fuel, and commercial supplies which is creating dire shortages. 

“The Lachin Corridor must remain fully and permanently open so that civilians can leave and return freely, communities can access food, medicine, and other essential supplies, and humanitarian organizations can see and meet needs on the ground. Azerbaijan must protect civilians, uphold its obligations to respect the human rights and fundamental freedoms of all individuals in its country, and ensure its forces comply with international humanitarian law. 

“Given the scale of the needs, the United States announced $11.5 million in humanitarian assistance earlier this week to support communities across the South Caucasus who are affected by the ongoing crisis. This is in addition to the more than $23 million the United States has provided in humanitarian assistance since 2020 in response to the situation in Nagorno-Karabakh. These funds will be used to provide everything from food to psychosocial support to help address trauma caused by the violence and mass displacement,” Power said in the statement.

RFE/RL Armenian Service – 09/28/2023

                                        Thursday, 


‘Ethnic Cleansing’ In Karabakh All But Complete, Says Yerevan

        • Nane Sahakian
        • Astghik Bedevian

Amenia - Refugees from Nagorno-Karabakh ride in a truck upon their arrival at 
the border village of Kornidzor, .


All ethnic Armenians remaining in Nagorno-Karabakh will flee to Armenia in the 
coming days, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian said on Thursday, accusing 
Azerbaijan of practically finishing “ethnic cleansing” in the region.

“Analysis shows that there will be no Armenians left in Nagorno-Karabakh in the 
coming days. This is a direct act of ethnic cleansing and depatriation, and 
something we have been warning the international community about for a long 
time,” charged Pashinian.

He complained that international criticism of Azerbaijan, which went on a 
large-scale military offensive in Karabakh on September 19, has not been backed 
up by “concrete actions.”

“If declarations of condemnation are not followed by commensurate political and 
legal decisions, condemnations become acts of acquiescence,” he added during a 
weekly cabinet meeting in Yerevan.

He spoke as a steady stream of Karabakh Armenian refugees crossed into Armenia 
through the Lachin corridor for the fifth consecutive day. According to the 
Armenian government, their total number reached 76,400 by 8 p.m. local time. The 
figure is equivalent to nearly two-thirds of Karabakh’s estimated population.

Nagorno-Karabakh - Refugees gather around a fire to warm themselves as they 
stuck in a jam of vehicles on the road leading towards the Armenian border, 
September 25, 2023.
The government pledged to help evacuate people remaining in Stepanakert and 
other Karabakh towns and villages. Deputy Prime Minister Tigran Khachatrian said 
many of them own no cars, trucks or other vehicles that would transport them to 
Armenia.

The government is planning to send a convoy of 35 buses to Stepanakert for that 
purpose, Khachatrian said, adding that Russian peacekeepers have agreed to 
escort it. He said the buses cannot head to Karabakh now because the 
50-kilometer road connecting it to Armenia remains clogged by hundreds of 
vehicles. It now takes at least 30 hours to drive from the Karabakh capital to 
the Armenian border, Khachatrian told Pashinian and fellow cabinet members.

In the Armenian border town of Goris, government officials and private 
volunteers kept scrambling to provide the arriving refugees with food, housing 
and other vital assistance. A spokeswoman for Pashinian said only 17,150 
refugees have accepted accommodation provided by the government in hotels, 
resorts and public buildings across the country. The prime minister announced 
later in the day that each refugee will receive a one-off cash payment of 
100,000 drams ($260).

Meanwhile, Baku has denied the accusations of ethnic cleansing and insisted that 
it wants to "reintegrate" the enclave's ethnic Armenian population into 
Azerbaijan. In a statement, the Azerbaijan's Foreign Ministry urged ethnic 
Armenian residents to stay in Karabakh.

Armenia - Karabakh refugees board a bus near a Red Cross registration center in 
Goris, .

Russia, which has been criticized by Yerevan for its peacekeepers' failure to 
prevent the fall of Karabakh, suggested that the fleeing Karabakh Armenians have 
nothing to fear.

"It's difficult to say who is to blame [for the exodus.] There is no direct 
reason for such actions," Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.

The exodus followed a Russian-brokered ceasefire that stopped the lighting 
Azerbaijani offensive. Under the terms of that agreement, Karabakh disarmed its 
army, paving the way for the restoration of full Azerbaijani control over the 
territory.

In line with the deal, Samvel Shahramanian, the Karabakh president, also signed 
a decree on Thursday disbanding all government bodies and saying that the 
self-proclaimed Nagorno-Karabakh, set up in September 1991, will cease to exist 
on January 1.

The ceasefire also commits Baku to permitting the “free, voluntary, and 
unrestrained passage” of Nagorno-Karabakh's ethnic Armenian residents, including 
''servicemen who have laid down arms.” Tigran Abrahamian, an Armenian opposition 
parliamentarian who used to work in Karabakh, said that despite this provision, 
the Azerbaijani authorities have threatened to arrest some Karabakh Armenians.

“I know names but it’s very dangerous to publicize them now,” Abrahamian told 
RFE/RL’s Armenian Service.

“The people remaining in Artsakh now, from ordinary citizens to the president, 
have the status of hostages,” he said.

Ruben Vardanyan, a former Karabakh premier, was arrested by Azerbaijani security 
forces in the Lachin corridor on Wednesday.




Armenia Moves Closer To Ratifying ‘Anti-Russian’ Treaty

        • Artak Khulian

Armenia - Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian greets Russian President Vladimir Putin 
at Zvartnots airport in Yerevan, November 23, 2022.


In what Russia called an “extremely hostile” move, Armenia’s leadership on 
Thursday took another step towards accepting jurisdiction of an international 
court that issued an arrest warrant for Russian President Vladimir Putin in 
March.

The Armenian parliament’s committee on legal affairs gave the green light for 
parliamentary ratification by of the founding treaty of the International 
Criminal Court (ICC). This means that the National Assembly controlled by Prime 
Minister Nikol Pashinian’s party should debate and vote on it next week.

The decision came amid a continuing deterioration of Armenia’s relations with 
Russia, which is increasingly calling into question the long-standing alliance 
of the two nations. The Russian Foreign Ministry listed earlier this month 
Yerevan’s plans to ratify the treaty, known as the Rome Statute, among “a series 
of unfriendly steps” taken by Pashinian’s administration.

Pashinian reaffirmed the ratification plans on September 24 as he blamed Moscow 
for Azerbaijan’s latest military offensive in Nagorno-Karabakh and effectively 
accused it seeking to turn Armenia into a Russian province. He claimed that 
signing up to the Rome Statute would help to safeguard Armenia’s independence.

Netherlands -- The building of the International Criminal Court in The Hague, 
November 23, 2015.

The main official rationale for the ratification is to bring Azerbaijan to 
justice for its “war crimes” and to prevent more Azerbaijani attacks on Armenia. 
Pro-government members of the parliament committee echoed it as they backed a 
corresponding decision proposed by Pashinian’s government.

Opposition politicians and other critics counter that Azerbaijan is not a party 
to the Rome Statute and would therefore ignore any pro-Armenian ruling by the 
ICC. They say the real purpose of ratifying the treaty is to drive another wedge 
between Russia and Armenia and score points in the West which has accused Russia 
of committing war crimes in Ukraine. The ICC endorsed those accusations when it 
issued the arrest warrant for Putin in March.

Independent legal experts believe that the ratification will commit the Armenian 
authorities to arresting Putin and extraditing him to The Hague tribunal if he 
visits the South Caucasus country. Yeghishe Kirakosian, who represents the 
Armenian government in international legal bodies, denied this during a meeting 
of the parliament panel boycotted by opposition lawmakers.

Kirakosian claimed that Putin and other heads of state enjoy immunity from 
arrest and that the Rome Statute allows countries to sign bilateral agreements 
to ignore ICC arrest warrants. Yerevan offered to sign such a deal with Moscow 
in April, he said, adding that the Russian side has still not responded to the 
proposal.

Armenia - Yeghishe Kirakosian (center) speaks at a parliament committe meeting 
in Yerevan, .

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov said he is “not familiar” with the proposal 
cited by Kirakosian. Armenia’s ratification of the ICC treaty would be a move 
“extremely hostile” towards Russia, said Peskov.

“Moscow hopes that there will be sober-minded forces in the National Assembly of 
Armenia that will not rubber-stamp a decision that is obviously toxic for 
Armenian-Russian relations,” the Russian Foreign Ministry warned, for its part. 
The “political decision” to ratify the treaty is unacceptable to Moscow, it told 
the RIA Novosti news agency.

The ministry already warned on Monday that Pashinian is “making a huge mistake 
by deliberately trying to destroy the multifaceted and centuries-old ties 
between Armenia and Russia.”

Armenia was among 120 countries that signed the Rome Statute, in 1998. But its 
parliament did not rush to ratify the document. In 2004, the country’s 
Constitutional Court ruled that the treaty runs counter to several provisions of 
the Armenian constitution which guarantee national sovereignty over judicial 
affairs.

Pashinian’s government decided last December to ask the court to again look into 
the Rome Statute and determine its conformity with the constitution that has 
been twice amended since 2004. The court ruled in March that the Rome Statute 
conforms to the amended constitution. The ruling came one week after the ICC 
issued the arrest warrant for Putin.




Azerbaijan Indicts Former Karabakh Premier After Arrest


AZERBAIJAN - A screenshort of Azerbaijani government video of Ruben Vardanyan's 
transfer to a prison in Baku, .


Authorities in Azerbaijan brought on Thursday a string of criminal charges 
against Ruben Vardanyan, an Armenian-born businessman and former 
Nagorno-Karabakh premier, one day after arresting him in the Lachin corridor.

Vardanyan, who held the second-highest post in Karabakh’s leadership from 
November 2022 to February 2023, was arrested at an Azerbaijani checkpoint on the 
main road connecting Karabakh Armenia as he fled the region along with tens of 
thousands of its ordinary residents.

Azerbaijan’s State Security Service said the prominent billionaire was charged 
with “financing terrorism,” illegally entering Karabakh last year and supplying 
its armed forces with military equipment. It said an Azerbaijani court remanded 
him in pre-trial custody.

Born and raised in Armenia, Vardanyan is a former investment banker who made his 
fortune in Russia in the 1990s and 2000s. The 55-year-old relocated to Karabakh 
and was appointed as its state minister last November shortly before Baku 
blocked traffic through the Lachin corridor. He made defiant statements during 
and after his short tenure, urging the Karabakh Armenians to resist Azerbaijani 
efforts to force them into submission.

Vardanyan is the first Karabakh leader arrested after last week’s Azerbaijani 
military offensive that paved the way for the restoration of Azerbaijani control 
over the Armenian-populated territory. There are growing indications that Baku 
is seeking to also jail other current and former Karabakh officials.

Nagorno Karabakh - Davit Babayan, 31March, 2022.

Davit Babayan, a well-known adviser to Karabakh’s current and former presidents, 
said on Thursday that “the Azerbaijani side has demanded my arrival in Baku.” He 
said he will turn himself in later in the day because he does not want to “cause 
serious damage” to other Karabakh Armenians who have not yet left the region.

In Yerevan, Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian expressed serious concern at 
“arbitrary arrests” made at the Azerbaijani checkpoint. Without mentioning 
Vardanyan by name, he said the Armenian government will take “necessary steps to 
protect the rights of arbitrarily arrested individuals, including in 
international bodies.”

The government on Wednesday asked the European Court of Human Rights to order 
Baku to urgently provide information about Vardanyan’s whereabouts and detention 
conditions. The Armenian Foreign Ministry said it will do its best to try to 
secure the tycoon’s release.

Vardanyan, who renounced his Russian citizenship late last year, has been 
increasingly critical of Pashinian in recent months, repeatedly denouncing his 
recognition of Azerbaijani sovereignty over Karabakh.


Reposted on ANN/Armenian News with permission from RFE/RL
Copyright (c) 2023 Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty, Inc.
1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.

 

Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra to perform at Carnegie Hall

 Guest Contributor Diaspora, Announcements 0

NEW YORK—The Armenian National Philharmonic Orchestra will perform at Carnegie Hall in New York on November 15 as part of its 2023 international tour.

The world tour includes the most acclaimed classical music stages of North America: Roy Thomson Hall in Toronto, ON; La Maison Symphonique in Montreal, QC and Boston Symphony Hall in Boston, MA. The concert at Carnegie Hall will take place on November 15 at 8 p.m. at the Stern Auditorium / Perelman Stage. 

The 2023 tour is a true celebration of the unique cultural moment and is dedicated to the anniversaries of two outstanding composers, whose names went down in the history of world musical art: the 150th anniversary of Sergei Rachmaninoff and the 120th anniversary of Aram Khachaturian.

The upcoming performance promises to be a remarkable showcase of the beauty and eternal value of classical music. Tickets are on sale.




UCLA panel on Atrocities, Genocide and the Duty to Prevent and to Punish under International Law

LOS ANGELES, Calif.—The Promise Institute for Human Rights at UCLA Law, in partnership with the Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA, will present a panel discussion entitled “Atrocities, Genocide and the Duty to Prevent and to Punish Under International Law: The Situation of Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh.” The panel will take place on Tuesday, October 10, 2023, at 7 p.m. (Pacific Time) at the UCLA Mong Learning Center (Engineering VI Building) and via the Zoom Webinar platform.

On Tuesday, September 19, 2023, Azerbaijan launched a military operation against the already-suffering people of Artsakh, who had been under a blockade for nearly 300 days, resulting in hundreds of deaths and injuries. This tragic situation became an overt initiation of wholesale, violent ethnic cleansing, and while a ceasefire agreement may be in place, threats to the safety and security of the ethnic Armenians in this region continue as the population evacuates their ancestral homeland.

Looking at the situation in Artsakh with respect to the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor blockade, as well as the recent active military attacks in Artsakh and the threats to Armenia generally, this panel will explore the following key questions, drawing from action taken thus far by states and international actors (or not):

  • What conditions trigger the duty to prevent atrocities, including genocide?
  • Once triggered, what is the scope of that duty, and what tools, both national and international, can help to identify these obligations as well as lawful steps for addressing a genocidal situation?
  • How can accountability for atrocities be achieved in this situation?

This panel will also assess how concurrent litigation before the Inernational Court of Justice intersects with these questions and further explore the extent to which lack of labeling or action with respect to the risk of genocide is due, in part, to a lack of clarity regarding the duty to prevent and punish genocide under international law.

The panel will be moderated by Professor Hannah Garry, executive director of the Promise Institute for Human Rights, expert signatory to the submission to the UN Special Adviser on the Prevention of Genocide on Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh, and will feature Dr. Taner Akçam, inaugural director of the Armenian Genocide Research Program of The Promise Armenian Institute at UCLA; Professor Thomas Becker, legal and policy director of The University Network for Human Rights, Columbia Law School and Wesleyan University, author of the briefing “The Tip of the Iceberg” on the Lachin/Berdzor Corridor blockade; Professor Juan Méndez, American University Washington College of Law, first U.N. Special Advisor on Prevention of Genocide, author of a “Preliminary Opinion” on the crisis in Nagorno-Karabakh/Artsakh and the need to prevent atrocity crimes; and Sheila Paylan, international law, human rights and gender expert and director of the Armenian Women’s Bar Association Board of Directors.

Registration for this event is required and free. Please visit the event registration webpage to sign up for in-person or virtual attendance. The panel will conclude with a small reception in the foyer. 

This event is co-sponsored by the Armenian Students’ Association at UCLAJewish World WatchUCLA Initiative to Study HateUCLA Luskin Center for History and PolicyNational Association for Armenian Studies and Research, and University Network for Human Rights.




The ARS stands ready to assist the Armenians of Artsakh

On the heels of the Weekly’s conversation with Nyree Derderian, chair of the Armenian Relief Society (ARS) Central Executive Board, the Armenians of Artsakh, already enduring the disastrous outcome of Azerbaijan’s months-long blockade and subsequent attacks, suffered more deaths and injuries from a fuel blast. True to its more than 100-year history of devotion and service to the Armenian people and homeland, the ARS immediately extended condolences and expressed readiness to help.

The ARS is scheduled to hold its quadrennial international convention in Yerevan in a few weeks. While there was initial concern regarding the safety of the delegates and guests, in light of Azerbaijan’s attacks on Artsakh and the unrest in Yerevan, the board decided to move forward with the convention. In the four years since this board was elected, the ARS has sprung into action for Armenians in need five times: Lebanon for economic strife, globally for the pandemic, Lebanon for food shortages, Lebanon for relief from the explosion, and Artsakh beginning with the 2020 war, in that order.

“If we as the Armenian Relief Society are in solidarity with the people and are on the ground, our convention can not only serve to assess our activities for the last four years, it can turn into what we do best, which is reaching out and providing humanitarian assistance,” Derderian said.

The organization has been planning and preparing to meet the needs of the Armenians from Artsakh prior to their arrival in Armenia by the thousands. The ARS will conduct an assessment of the primary and secondary needs of those arriving in Armenia. In contrast to the 2020 war, explained Derderian, the Armenians from Artsakh are being “forcefully deported” with no concrete plan for their future. “The approach needs to be different from helping someone who has been stricken by war with the hope of returning,” Derderian said, explaining that there must be respect and understanding of what the people are bringing with them and what they have left behind.

During the 2020 war, the ARS promised to provide assistance to 1,000 displaced families from Artsakh, amounting to $1 million in aid, through its “Stand with an Artsakh Family” program. Donors pledged $250 per month for four months. According to Derderian, the ARS was ultimately able to assist more than 1,000 families through the generosity of its members and supporters. In fact, she said that over the last three years, the ARS has spent approximately $6 million on projects in Artsakh with humanitarian aid, as well as providing assistance through shipments from afar under the ARS name.

Derderian noted that for the first time in three wars, the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is physically registering every Armenian from Artsakh arriving in Armenia through Kornidzor. This will provide critical information for the ARS, which is in contact with the ICRC, to determine the assistance needed, both immediately and in the long term.

Derderian was quick to note the natural and immediate instincts of ARS members, sharing a story from besieged and blockaded Artsakh at the beginning of the Azeri attacks on September 19. ARS members sheltering in their office in Stepanakert found the means to get some flour. They knew that the ARS Soseh Kindergarten in Stepanakert was being used as a shelter – one of the purposes for which it was built. They put their lives at risk to acquire the flour and make bread to provide nutrition to those in the shelter.

“We have maintained constant contact with our members in Artsakh from the start of the blockade as much as possible without putting them at risk,” Derderian said. Conversations with ARS members in Artsakh always end with reassurances and motivation for their fellow ARS members globally. “They were asking us to continue to struggle for them. The fact that they have not lost hope when all seems lost means that we don’t have the right to lose hope,” Derderian said. “We have to do everything in our means possible, and impossible, to make sure that they come out of this situation feeling like someone cares.”

With that mission firmly in mind, the ARS immediately issued a call to help the Armenians of Artsakh forcibly displaced from their homeland.

There are also thousands of students from Artsakh who are currently studying in Armenia who feel abandoned and have lost contact with their families. The ARS is initiating a plan to provide aid to those students.

While the ARS is conducting its needs assessment, Derderian noted that the organization always provides immediate sustenance. “We are A to Z,” she said, stating that the ARS will find those displaced from their homes in Artsakh a place to live, provide food and medical attention. “We are a volunteer force to be reckoned with,” Derderian stated. She remarked on the adept ability of ARS members to raise funds and spread the word, often better than organizations with more resources than the ARS.

In the last few days, the Central Executive Board held an online meeting with all of the ARS entities’ executive boards to discuss the current situation in Artsakh and Armenia and what the role of the ARS globally is to support the people during this critical time. The ARS in Armenia is “organized on the ground and putting steps forward to have the readiness to reach out to the Artsakhtsis coming into Armenia,” Derderdian said.   

“The ARS has been doing this for 113 years. We have a mechanism that works and are always learning from that mechanism,” Derderian said. “If you want to donate to the people of Artsakh, donate to the ARS – an organization you can trust to bring programs to fruition.”

Editor
Pauline Getzoyan is editor of the Armenian Weekly and an active member of the Rhode Island Armenian community. A longtime member of the Providence ARF and ARS, she also is a former member of the ARS Central Executive Board. A longtime advocate for genocide education through her work with the ANC of RI, Pauline is co-chair of the RI branch of The Genocide Education Project. In addition, she has been an adjunct instructor of developmental reading and writing in the English department at the Community College of Rhode Island since 2005.


Chicago Armenian-Americans Rally for Armenia and Artsakh

Members of Chicago’s Armenian-American community demonstrating in Daley Plaza in Downtown Chicago to raise awareness of the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh

CHICAGO, Ill.—More than 100 Armenian-Americans gathered in Daley Plaza in Downtown Chicago to honor the 32nd anniversary of the Republic of Armenia’s second Independence Day. Community members marked the occasion by demonstrating to raise awareness for the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Artsakh.

The program began with Very Rev. Father Boghos Tinkjian of All Saints’ Armenian Apostolic Church in Glenview offering opening prayers. Armen Alexanian, co-chair of the Armenian National Committee (ANC) of IL, served as master of ceremonies. Chicago “Ararat” Armenian Youth Federation (AYF) Chapter member Aleena Surenian and Hagop Soulakian, chairman of the Chicago Christapor Gomideh of the Armenian Revolutionary Federation (ARF), offered their reflections on the importance of the anniversary and the ongoing humanitarian crisis in Artsakh. Both provided a voice of hope and reason for the activists and demonstrators. Students from the Taniel Varoujan Armenian school–the next generation of the Armenian-American community– and dozens of other supporters and allies joined the demonstration. 

Students of the Taniel Varoujan School leading the Armenian Independence Day event in Chicago

Surenian reminded the crowd of the importance of Armenian independence. She spoke of ancient kingdoms and struggles and compared them to the uncertain situations Armenians faced to secure their independence first in 1918 and then again in 1991: numerous genocidal neighbors, an indifferent international community and a resolute will for a free and independent Armenia. Noting the importance of community activism and the power of the American voter, she encouraged the crowd to “be politically active and to continually [pressure] the U.S. government to do the right thing for Armenia… and to work together.” 

During the demonstration, Ken Hachikian, co-chair of the ANC of IL, was interviewed by WBBM Radio – one of Chicago’s largest commercial all-day radio stations – and took the opportunity to inform the public about the ongoing humanitarian crisis. He urged community members to rally behind and join local organizations, such as the ANC of Illinois, in alerting U.S. lawmakers to the crisis and urging immediate action to alleviate the humanitarian effects of starvation, ethnic cleansing and genocide on the Armenian population of Artsakh.

Soulakian shared the turbulent history of the Armenian nation, comparing it to the ongoing crisis in Artsakh, and reminded the crowd to be persistent and vigilant. He called on members of the community to become ANCA Rapid Responders and to continue pressuring U.S. lawmakers to sign onto key pieces of legislation. Soulakian noted the importance of remaining hopeful and spoke of the importance of the Armenian Diaspora, which he called “a beacon of hope, strength for our homeland.”

Prominent community member Honorary Consul Oscar Tatosian spoke about the pride all Armenians should have about the 32nd anniversary of the second independence of Armenia. He also spoke about the tragedy unfolding in Artsakh as the world has stood silently by. He called upon all Armenians in the Diaspora to unite in helping their fellow Armenians in distress in Artsakh.

An impressive 25-foot Armenian tricolor hoisted above in Delay Plaza in Downtown Chicago

On this occasion, a 25-foot Armenian flag was raised over the City of Chicago public plaza, to the strains of Mer Hairenik, as a symbol of the community’s solidarity with their brothers and sisters in Armenia and Artsakh. Following the flag raising, the AYF led a protest march at the plaza, criticizing Azerbaijan’s genocidal actions in Artsakh, aided and abetted by Turkey. The students of the Taniel Varoujan School and other community members were active participants in the protest.

“We were honored to be able to do our part in raising awareness for the ongoing genocide in Artsakh. With heavy hearts, we protested to the Chicago community and asked our neighbors, friends and lawmakers to stand on the justice page of history, as we continue to advocate for our brothers and sisters entrenched in the mountains of Artsakh with clear uncertainty on what the future holds,” said Alexanian. “It is our duty to be the voice for the voiceless, and I am proud that we had the opportunity to show both the Chicago community and our next generation of Armenian-Americans, the students from Taniel Varoujan Armenian School, the importance of activism and fighting for your roots and right to exist.”

The Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region is part of the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots organization, the ANCA. Working in coordination with the ANCA in Washington, DC, and a network of chapters and supporters throughout the Eastern United States, the ANCA-ER actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


ANCA Eastern Region Summer Interns to be Honored at 17th Annual Awards Program

BOSTON, Mass.—The Armenian National Committee of America (ANCA) Eastern Region will recognize the accomplishments of its 2023 ANCA Leo Sarkisian summer interns – Olivia Abajian (NY), Vahagn Boudakian (NY), Tsoline Gevorkian (MA), Emma Lopez (CT), Ruby Topalian (MD) and Nver Saghatelyan (MD) –  at this year’s 17th Annual ANCA Eastern Region Endowment Fund Awards Program, United for Artsakh, at the Royal Sonesta Boston Hotel on Saturday, October 7, 2023. 

Founded in 1986, the ANCA LSI program is named in memory of the late ANCA Eastern Region community leader Leo Sarkisian. LSI provides students from both the eastern and western U.S. and Canada with an opportunity to participate in a six-week intensive program in Washington, D.C., designed to give them the tools to advance issues of concern to the Armenian-American community on the federal, state and local level. Now in its 36th year, the program has hundreds of alumni worldwide.

During their six-week stay in the nation’s capital, interns participated in various activities carefully planned by the ANCA office in Washington, D.C. In fact, in three days, interns visited 535 offices encouraging members to cosign a letter led by Representative Barbara Lee (D-CA) to cease all military aid to Azerbaijan – their efforts acquired 54 cosponsors for the letter, setting the course for what the rest of their internship would entail. The remaining weeks would encompass multiple lectures by several key members of Washington’s Armenian-American political elite, who offered the interns their experiences in a variety of fields, encompassing state government, journalism, lobbying, consulting and ambassadorship. 

Interns for the LSI program are selected through a competitive application process, with their acceptance being based on several criteria, including academic excellence, demonstrated leadership and community involvement. Interns are provided with room and board in the ANCA Aramian House, donated by generous sister donors Martha and Sue Aramian and Margo Aramian Regan.

The Eastern Region interns from this year’s internship all shared a collective focus on advancing the Armenian Cause in the political, economic and social realms of society as they brought a wealth of experience from their professional and educational backgrounds. The interns shared a range of passion, encompassing the collective fields of government and politics, international relations, psychology, sociology, political science, international studies, economics, and Middle Eastern and European languages and cultures, all of which form a strong foundation for the next generation of activists and the future of the Armenian-American community. 

“The many talents and accomplishments of our youth, as well as their drive and motivation, make me confident in the future of the ANCA and Hai Tahd. I have the pleasure of recognizing the interns at this year’s awards dinner and hope my words will continue to empower them and encourage our youth to join the tireless fight for justice for Artsakh, Armenia and the Armenian nation,” said Steve Mesrobian, ANCA Eastern Region Board member.

The future of the region – this year’s ANCA Leo Sarkisian Internship interns – will be honored at the 17th Annual Awards Program, United for Artsakh at the Royal Sonesta Hotel on Saturday, October 7.

The 2023 ANCA Leo Sarkisian Eastern Region interns recognized at the Awards Program are Olivia Abajian, Vahagn Boudakian, Tsoline Gevorkian, Emma Lopez, Ruby Topalian and Nver Saghatelyan.

Olivia Abajian is a current freshman at the University of Maryland, majoring in government and politics with a concentration in international relations. Abajian is the editor-in-chief of the Terrapin Yearbook and a member of Phi Sigma Sigma. Bringing her Armenian background onto campus, she is also a member of UMD’s Armenian Students Association and an active member of the AYF-YOARF “Hyortik” Chapter at home.

Vahagn Boudakian, who is pursuing a major in political science with a minor in psychology at Brooklyn College CUNY, actively contributed to refugee relief efforts following the 2020 war and contributed to the war efforts. He is hopeful to employ the new skills acquired from the internship to “further the cause of Armenia’s progress.”

Tsoline Gevorkian, a lifelong member of the AYF, currently serves as the treasurer of the Middlesex County West AYF Chapter. At the University of Vermont, she studies psychology and sociology as a rising junior. Gevorkian credits the internship for allowing her to gain more knowledge about American politics and giving her more confidence toward one day hosting her own AYF educational lecture. It was more important – and a source of pride – that she could spend her summer “fighting for our brothers and sisters in Artsakh and for an Azad Angakh Miatsyal Haiastan.

Emma Lopez, who recently graduated from the University of Massachusetts Amherst with a degree in political science, wore many hats at her local Armenian Students Association, where she served as vice president, secretary and social media manager. At her home parish, St. George Armenian Church, she is an active member of the local ACYOA, where she also regularly volunteers in community events. She looks forward to using her new skills and experiences to enrich her home community. 

Nver Saghatelyan, a student at John Hopkins University, is majoring in international studies and economics. He saw the internship as an opportunity to familiarize himself with the dynamics of American politics and to bring his new lessons back home to Armenia and Artsakh, where he hopes to use these experiences to “challenge the status quo and contribute to peaceful resolutions in contrast to the ongoing tensions and violence.”
Lastly, Ruby Topalian, a rising sophomore at Trinity College Dublin, is pursuing a dual bachelor’s program through Columbia University. At Trinity College Dublin, she studies Middle Eastern and European languages and cultures, especially focusing on Arabic and Italian. At Columbia, she studies political science. According to her, the internship reconnected her to her Armenian heritage, and as an editor on multiple campus publications, she looks forward to leveraging her position to encourage her peers to become educated about Armenian-American issues, hoping that her efforts will create more activists for the Armenian Cause.

Hosted by the ANC of Eastern Massachusetts, the evening will feature a cocktail reception and silent auction beginning at 6 p.m. and a seated dinner and an awards program at 7 p.m. During the dinner presentation, the region will present deserving honorees with awards, including the inaugural ANCA Eastern Region Excellence in Education Award to Houry Boyamian; the inaugural ANCA Eastern Region Advocacy Award to Dr. Michael Rubin; the ANCA Eastern Region Vahan Cardashian Award to lifelong activists Joseph Dagdigian of the ANC of Merrimack Valley and Barkev Kaligian of the ANC of Eastern Massachusetts; and the ANCA Eastern Region Freedom Award, which will be presented to Congresswoman Katherine Clark. 

“While the evening will be appropriately somber given the current situation in Artsakh, we are depending on our community to fully support the ANCA Eastern Region’s fundraiser, which will be dedicated to the people of Artsakh and the work we must do together for the continued existence of Artsakh and Armenia,” said Ara Nazarian, ANCA Eastern Region Endowment Fund Awards Program committee chair. 

For more information about this year’s Awards Program and to purchase tickets, please visit https://givergy.us/ancaer or email [email protected].

The Armenian National Committee of America Eastern Region is part of the largest and most influential Armenian American grassroots organization, the ANCA. Working in coordination with the ANCA in Washington, DC, and a network of chapters and supporters throughout the Eastern United States, the ANCA-ER actively advances the concerns of the Armenian American community on a broad range of issues.


Azerbaijan continues ethnic cleansing of Artsakh’s Armenians

Fuel storage facility near Stepanakert explodes (NKR InfoCenter, September 25)

YEREVAN—Amidst the humanitarian crisis in Artsakh and Azerbaijan’s national policy of the ethnic cleansing of its Armenian population, forcing thousands to flee their homeland, a powerful explosion ripped through a fuel storage facility near Stepanakert on Monday.

Hundreds of people were lining up at the fuel facility where the blast occurred, because they had been promised fuel –  a scarcity during the over nine-month long blockade – for their cars in order to move to Armenia. 

As a result of the explosion, 290 patients were admitted to different hospitals with various degrees of burns. According to the Ministry of Health of Artsakh, at least seven patients have died in the hospital. Dozens are still in critical condition. 13 unrecognized bodies were transferred to the Bureau of Forensic Examination. Many people are considered missing, because they were burned as a result of the explosion. 

Former State Minister and Human Rights Ombudsman of Artsakh Artak Beglaryan reported that on Tuesday, 168 patients wounded in the fuel depot explosion were evacuated to Yerevan – 96 by Armenian and Russian helicopters and 72 by Armenian ambulances with the support of the International Committee of the Red Cross. There are 68 confirmed deaths. Meanwhile, the bodies of 125 soldiers who gave their lives protecting Artsakh were transferred to Armenia on Wednesday. According to consolidated data from requests to information centers in Artsakh, the fate of 105 Armenians as a result of the explosion is unknown. 

Weekly contributor Siranush Sargsyan said that the situation in Artsakh’s hospitals following the explosion is “catastrophic.” “Shortages of medical staff, panic, people trying to find their loved ones from the blast,” she wrote on X (formerly Twitter).

The explosion took place hours after the second round of talks between Azerbaijani officials and Artsakh representatives was held Monday in the town of Ivanyan, just north of Stepanakert. The first round was held last week in Yevlakh, where an agreement was reached on the withdrawal of the remaining units and servicemen of the Armed Forces of Armenia from Artsakh, the disbandment and complete disarmament of the Artsakh Defense Army, and the removal of heavy equipment and weapons from the territory of Artsakh.

The agreement was reached 24 hours after Azerbaijan launched an assault on Artsakh on September 19, heavily shelling civilian settlements and infrastructure. Azerbaijan’s military offensive and bombardment of civilians claimed many lives, enabled mass displacement and triggered turmoil across the region. 

Another major humanitarian crisis is looming on the horizon. As of Wednesday afternoon, about 50,000 Armenians have been forced to flee their homes in Artsakh in the fear of living under Azerbaijani rule, among a population of 120,000. Although Azerbaijan has made numerous statements about the “peaceful integration” of ethnic Armenians into Azerbaijani society, decades of conflict and atrocities and recent events have proven otherwise. 

Multiple videos circulating on Telegram channels show inhumane acts carried out by Azerbaijani soldiers against ethnic Armenian civilians, soldiers and establishments. Two Azerbaijani soldiers fired at a 13th-century monastery in the village of Charektar in the Shahumyan region of Artsakh, Caucasus Heritage Watch reported on X on Wednesday. “Such attacks are a direct violation of the International Court of Justice’s provisional measure on Armenian cultural heritage and must be investigated and brought to justice,” the organization said in a statement.

Artsakh search and rescue operation searches for people’s remains (NKR InfoCenter, September 26)

While the ethnic cleansing policy of Azerbaijan continues to threaten the lives of the ethnic Armenians remaining in the region, thousands of families have been forced to flee their homes, only taking items of importance – leaving their family homes and their livelihood behind. In order to honor his memory and prevent its desecration by Azerbaijan, citizens have reportedly removed the monument of the national hero Monte Melkonyan in the Martuni region of Artsakh and plan to take it with them to Armenia.

The mass exodus of Armenians from Artsakh is only the start of another serious humanitarian crisis. As families flee to save their and their children’s lives from another genocide, traffic jams on the road to Kornidzor have already caused the death of an elderly man. 

Following long hours of travel, Armenians from Artsakh must go through the checkpoint illegally placed by Azerbaijan on the Hakari Bridge at the entrance to the Berdzor (Lachin) Corridor to reach the registration and first aid centers that have been set up by the Red Cross and local organizations.

The small village of Kornidzor in Armenia’s southernmost Syunik region has become the first stop on the way of the forced migration of Armenians from Artsakh. Due to the shortage of fuel and buses, thousands of people arrive in Armenia sitting in the back of trucks. 

The first point of registration for the people of Artsakh was in the town of Goris until Tuesday night, when humanitarian organizations announced that due to the high volume of individuals coming from Artsakh, the resources in Goris have reached capacity, and the new point of registration will now be in Vayk

Volunteers on the ground in Syunik advise all Armenians to register their problems in detail at the registration points including medical, psychological and domestic. They also advise that all individuals request a medical examination and that those who are collecting aid send warm clothes that can be distributed to the people during registration ahead of the cold winter months. 

As this humanitarian crisis unfolds, the Armenian Weekly will continue to follow developments and provide firsthand reporting on families displaced from Artsakh.

House destroyed by Azerbaijani shelling in Berqadzor of Askeran region (Artsakh Ombudsman, September 24)

Hoory Minoyan was an active member of the Armenian community in Los Angeles until she moved to Armenia prior to the 44-day war. She graduated with a master's in International Affairs from Boston University, where she was also the recipient of the William R. Keylor Travel Grant. The research and interviews she conducted while in Armenia later became the foundation of her Master’s thesis, “Shaping Identity Through Conflict: The Armenian Experience.” Hoory continues to follow her passion for research and writing by contributing to the Armenian Weekly.